If you grew up playing video games, like Space Invaders, and now you are an adult and you're still playing video games, like Halo, then you've probably had interactions with younger generations online. My experience is that kids today can be a handful. Quite different, in fact, from how I remember myself when I played video games at that age. But today is a very different world. Instant access to information or media via the internet has transformed kids into something new. They know more at early age than ever before, but discernment of that information can often be problematic. This episode of Gamer Scores introduces the youngest member of the online group of friends. Owen is a brilliant 12-year old boy with a knack for getting into trouble and sometimes getting out of it.

Episode 02: Bulls, I
John and Brian discuss game mechanics. Owen outsmarts a bully at school.

I've always wondered what a sitcom about gamers would be like. The characters on the Big Bang Theory may play games, but they are scientists, nerds and geeks. I wouldn't necessarily call them hardcore gamers. So I decided to create an short-form animated series about gamers who live gaming. It permeates every part of their lives and effects who they are an how they grow as individuals. Gamer Scores centers around two friends, who met online, but have never met in real life and what happens to them when anonymity can no longer be maintained with an expanding party. Is a friendship that is solely based on conversation possible?

Episode 01: Anti-Midas Touch
John has an uncanny ability to mess things up with the opposite sex.

Not too long ago, I felt like there was too much vampire pop culture being thrown around. Maybe it was the tween-exploitation of the Twilight books and movies, but it seemed like everywhere I turned there was some new iteration of vampires sucking away at my imagination and it seemed like a little too much. On the other hand, zombies have clearly been in geek culture heavily for quite a few years and with the popularity of the Walking Dead on AMC, it seems like Zombies are not leaving anytime soon. Why am I more open to zombies and not vampires, both being undead? Maybe it's simply fight or flight, our natural instinct to survive, or maybe it's just the simple fact that once the zombie apocalypse occurs, I no longer have to worry about late fees!